How To Get Unstuck

 
unstuck.jpg
 
 

You know what to do, but you can’t make yourself do it.

You know that if you took that leap, things would be so much better – but the leap is too big and scary.

You sit down each day with the resolve to do the big thing, but at the end of every day, it is still unchecked on your to-do list.

You’re stuck.

Getting stuck is an inevitable part of living a New Happy life. It isn’t a moral failing or something wrong with you: it’s just something normal that happens when you are pursuing your dreams. Because if there is one thing that your brain doesn’t like, it’s feeling scared. It will do whatever it takes to stop you from taking the step into the scary unknown. If you want to live your true potential, it’s essential that you learn the skill of coaxing yourself into coming out of the safe, cozy cave and into the daylight to make stuff happen.

Here are the three steps that will help you to get unstuck.

Trick your brain

When you are stuck, your brain is running two completely conflicting programs. The first program, run by our primitive brain, senses imminent danger and is screaming at us to not take a single step further. When this program is in control, you tend to either stare hopelessly at your task, procrastinate endlessly, or simply give up before you get started.

The second part of our brain, run by our more evolved selves, is begging us to please, please, please, just open the email and send it, start the poem, or make the call. It’s reminding you that you decided on this goal for a reason and that you really want to achieve it because it will make you happier. It also loves to berate you, telling you that you’re flawed and stupid and horrible because you can’t just do the thing.

The primitive program and the evolved program are battling it out in an arm wrestle fight for control. Usually, neither one wins, and deadlocked, you end up doing nothing for days and months and years, torn between stopping and starting.

To trick your brain, you need to shrink the task that your evolved self has set your primitive self. Big tasks that represent extreme vulnerability and require big courage like “Write a book” or “Start a company” are way too much for the primitive program to cope with. They trigger instant five-alarm alerts. Instead, you have to shrink the big dream into separate tasks that are much more palatable, ones that your primitive brain might not even realize ladder up into the bigger dream. “Write a book” turns into “write 100 words each day.” “Start a company” turns into “buy a domain name today.” This allows you to gently coax your primitive program into doing what your evolved program wants to.

Check your control mindset

Sometimes we get stuck because we have developed an external locus of control, which is the belief that external circumstances have control over your life, and what you do doesn’t really matter. If you have an external locus of control, you might catch yourself engaging in self-talk like “nothing I do really matters,” “this is never going to change,” or “no matter how hard I try, I won’t succeed.” (To learn a lot more about your locus of control, check out our new book, which teaches you how to reclaim control in the pandemic!)

If your conflicting brain programs have been locked in an arm-wrestle for a while, you’ll likely develop an external locus of control. When times are hard, like these ones, it’s even easier to start to believe that your life isn’t your responsibility. Why bother acting? Nothing matters. Your lack of activity then results in no progress or changes, making you feel even more stuck. It’s a vicious cycle.

You have to reclaim a sense of agency by exercising control over your life in some way. My favorite way to do this is to make some really weird choices that shake up this mindset. Here are a few examples:

  • If you normally walk or drive a specific route to work, take a completely different one

  • If you usually have yogurt and granola for weekday breakfast, make yourself a full-on bacon and eggs breakfast

  • If you always flop on the couch when you get home, flop on the floor and do 20 pushups instead

Any small, strange choice jostles your mindset just enough to see that, in fact, you are always making choices, not acting is still a choice, and you’ve just gotten mired in a pattern of making choices that make you feel stuck.

Find the right type of support

Through our relationships with other people, we can find the security and safety that inspires us to take big, bold risks. If we believe that we have enough support — and critically, that that support will still be there no matter what happens with the risk — we can release ourselves from our self-imposed prisons. I love how New Happy member Steph described this:

My friends often have different perspectives than me and provide great words of wisdom on how I can reframe the situation and become more action-oriented (rather than dwell on a situation). Knowing that I can take action on the situation and make it better, rather than being a victim, helps me feel less stuck.

Who in your life makes you feel safe and secure? Who can you share your dreams with? Who unconditionally supports your biggest, boldest ideas? These are your essential sources of support when you’re stuck. Here are a few ways you can lean on them to get unstuck:

  • Tell them what you are stuck on. Sometimes, simply telling someone about our stories and challenges is all we need to see what’s getting in our way.

  • Ask them to help you identify your blind spots. A friend who will ask you great questions is an invaluable resource to pinpoint the things that are in your way.

  • Request a cheerleader. Sometimes, we need to just hear from the people we love that no matter what happens, they are going to love us.

The next time you find yourself stuck, try out one of these strategies. The more that you use them, the more you’ll discover that getting unstuck is simply a skill that, like anything else, can be developed and strengthened.

Here’s to you moving past roadblocks with record speed!

 
Stephanie Harrison